We sought to investigate the decision making profile of Primary Progressive Aphasia (PPA) by assessing patients diagnosed with this disease (n=10), patients diagnosed with behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia (bvFTD, n=35), and matched controls (n=14) using the Iowa Gambling Task, a widely used test that mimics real-life decision making. Participants were also evaluated with a complete neuropsychological battery. Patients with PPA were unable to adopt an advantageous strategy on the IGT, which resulted in a flat performance, different to that exhibited by both controls (who showed advantageous decision making) and bvFTD patients (who showed risk-appetitive behavior). The decision making profile of PPA patients was not associated with performance on language tasks and did not differ between sub-variants of the disease (namely, semantic dementia and progressive nonfluent aphasia). Investigating decision making in PPA is crucial both from a theoretical perspective, as it can shed light about the way in which language interacts with other cognitive functions, as well as a clinical standpoint, as it could lead to a more objective detection of impairments of decision making deficits in this condition. © 2012-IOS Press and the authors. All rights reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Gleichgerrcht, E., Torralva, T., Roca, M., Szenkman, D., Ibanez, A., Richly, P., … Manes, F. (2012). Decision making cognition in primary progressive aphasia. In Behavioural Neurology (Vol. 25, pp. 45–52). Hindawi Limited. https://doi.org/10.1155/2012/606285
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